SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (72945)7/12/2006 10:00:12 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361090
 
Countdown to $100 oil (27) - 'Mission Accomplished' - High oil prices are here to stay
by Jerome a Paris
Sat Jul 8th, 2006 at 04:00:33 PM EDT

Oil hit $75 per barrel again this week, setting once again new highs.

While not very spectacular - after all, we hit $70 almost a year ago, and $75 a few months back already, recent price increases are part of a pretty consistent upwards trend worth putting in context again.

Before I take off to my much needed holidays, let me chart once more why many anlysts don't see oil prices go down in the foreseeable future - and why I personally believe they'll go up significantly.

And of course, go read ManfromMiddletown's diary on the same topic, with an excellent summary of how the Mexican election might have a major impact on oil prices: Jerome may get his $100 barrel... from Mexico

lots of graphs

eurotrib.com

=============

$300 oil? Highest forcast I've ever seen.

Oil industry hits peak production PRINT FRIENDLY EMAIL STORY
PM - Monday, 10 July , 2006 18:34:00
Reporter: Barney Porter
MARK COLVIN: A leading expert has warned that the world's oil industry has started to reach its peak production rate and is already in the first phase of a transition to an uncertain future.

Dr Ali Samsam Bakhtiari predicted on this program two years ago that the crisis would begin in 2006 or 2007.

Now he says the current estimates of oil reserves are grossly exaggerated and we are approaching a time when oil may reach $US 300 a barrel and demand will out-strip supply.

It may happen this decade.

Barney Porter has the story.

BARNEY PORTER: Dr Ali Samsam Bakhtiari says in one regard, the science is simple.

ALI SAMSAM BAKHTIARI: Crude oil is the master domino. When you tumble crude oil, all the other dominoes tumble, whichever they are. And that is what makes this peak oil so important.

BARNEY PORTER: Dr Bakhtiari has recently retired as a senior advisor for the National Iranian Oil Company in Tehran and has written several books and more than 65 papers on the Iranian and international oil and gas industry.

In a speech in Sydney today, he said the oil industry had hit a peak production of 81 million barrels per day, which would decline to 55 million barrels per day up to 2020.

And Dr Bakhtiari says there's another, more immediate problem, for the industry.

He says the last great find was in the 1990s in the so-called 'frontier areas' which included Alaska, the North Sea, Brazil and deeper off-shore sites.

They've since been developed until there are now only two left: the Arctic Ocean, and Antarctica.

ALI SAMSAM BAKHTIARI: I hope that the oil industry will not go into Antarctica but, today I am not so sure, you know, because when the price will be $200 or $300 per barrel, then anything can happen.

BARNEY PORTER: Dr Bakhtiari says Russia's production actually peaked in 2004 and has since been in decline, which will have major ramifications for Europe. He claims the Russian industry officials won't admit the facts because they still want to attract investors.

Dr Bakhtiari says the latest finds by the industry will add only, at most, a few days to the world's reserves.

ALI SAMSAM BAKHTIARI: We are consuming, world-wide, 30 billion barrels of oil every year. It is an enormous amount. But what is the industry finding? It is finding something between four and six only.

So every year that passes, that we have passed in this century, we had a deficit on consumption versus finds.

BARNEY PORTER: As to the future, Dr Bakhtiari describes a stage he calls "Transition One" where change will be slow and gradual, a sort of business as usual, because of the world's ongoing addiction to oil.

But he also says there's an element of uncertainty because traditional laws of economics are changing. Dr Bahktiari says in theory, if the price of oil is doubled, the demand should go down.

But he notes in the past four years the price has actually tripled and demand is still increasing.

ALI SAMSAM BAKHTIARI: We are entering a brand new world, a world that is totally different. We are used to this growth and we have been addicted to this growth.

BARNEY PORTER: However in the few years left in his transition model, Dr Bakhtiari says Western Australia may be a model for the world with its approach to public transport, providing free buses and a light-rail system throughout the suburbs.

ALI SAMSAM BAKHTIARI: The more you would invest in public transport and in rail, it would be a benefit, but naturally it is going to be expensive first. But if you spend every dollar that you spend today, it's much better than the dollar that you are going to spend tomorrow.

MARK COLVIN: Dr Ali Samsam Bakhtiari ending that report by Barney Porter.

And in tonight's Four Corners on ABC TV, Jonathan Holmes will be examining the issue of Peak Oil, as it's called, in a program which took him to the Middle East, the US and Europe to interview the key protagonists. That's at 8.30 on ABC television.
abc.net.au